About Me

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Hi! I'm Eunice and I live in Bolton, Lancashire, with my two dogs Sophie and Sugar and an assortment of cats - well it used to be Sophie and Sugar, now it's Sophie and Poppie. I first began camping back in 1997 when my then partner took me to Anglesey for my birthday weekend. We slept in the back of the car - a hatchback - using the cushions off the settee at home as a mattress, and cooked and brewed up on a single burner camping stove. The site was good, the views were great, the weather fantastic and I was completely hooked. Following that weekend we got a two-man tent and some proper accessories and returned to Anglesey two weeks later, then over time we progressed to a three-man tent followed by an old trailer tent, then a new trailer tent, a campervan and finally a caravan. When my partner decided that the grass was greener on the other side of the street - literally - in April 2009 and I suddenly found myself alone after fifteen years, I decided there was no way I was going to give up camping and caravanning if I could cope on my own. This blog is the story of my travels, trials and tribulations since becoming a solo camper - I hope you like it

Sunday September 10th 2017 - If I'd known at the start....

....everything that was going to happen during the next ten days I probably wouldn't have gone to the Norfolk coast for my end-of-summer holiday.

I left home at 8am that morning for the long drive down to my usual camp site at California, a few miles north of Great Yarmouth, and as I'd had no breakfast before setting off I pulled up at a roadside truck stop just over an hour into my journey to get a takeaway coffee. I had some bread rolls and bacon-and-egg sandwich filling in my coolbox so it was easy enough to make a snack to go with the coffee, however the coffee didn't last long enough to go with the snack - I'd only managed to drink a mouthful of it when I accidentally knocked the rest of it all over the floor of the van between the two front seats. Now I don't believe in fate but that one minor mishap seemed to somehow set the tone for the rest of the holiday.

A couple of hours later I made my usual stop at the Cheerio Cafe on the A17 to give myself a break from driving and to take the dogs for a walk along the edge of the field behind the cafe car park. That field usually contains crops which grow low to the ground but this time it was full of densely-growing maize which was taller than me; there was a bit of a path through one part of it so just for curiosity - and even though I knew I really shouldn't - I took a walk through the jungle for a short distance and snapped the first couple of photos of the holiday.



With no more stops after that I finally arrived at the camp site just after 2pm; I hadn't pre-booked but at this time of year the place is so quiet I knew I'd have no trouble getting a pitch, however when I went to reception I was hit by a most unwelcome surprise - the pitch fees, which had always been very reasonable, had increased substantially since last year and were now beyond my personal budget. Finding somewhere else cheaper at such short notice was almost impossible without internet access so I had no choice but to pay up, though I wasn't particularly happy about it.

When I got round onto the camping field I had another surprise - the toilet block and the two holiday cottages overlooking the field had been demolished, the land levelled and grassed and half a dozen new static caravans with decking were sited there. There was a small Portacabin toilet block at the end of the site and the original concrete footpath from reception to the camping field had been widened into a tarmac road with speed ramps; the end of this new road encroached onto the field and had parking spaces taken from the two pitches at either side. No wonder the pitch fees had gone up - I suppose someone has to pay for all these changes even if they don't benefit from them.

The pitch I would normally have used was now only half its original size due to the tarmac parking space so I parked on the next one, connected up the hook-up cable and sorted out my tv aerial. Unfortunately it was a bit too windy to attempt putting the tent up just then so as I was sleeping in the van anyway that's where I spent the rest of the day and evening, and with no-one else camping on the field my first night on site was just how I like it - lovely and quiet.



11 comments:

  1. Oh Tigermouse what an awful experience for you, it reminds me of a saying I read only this week,"You Have To Epereinece The Not So Good To Sppreciate The Good." Hope the rest of the days away were better.

    Yvonne.











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    1. That was just the first day of a holiday full of mishaps and minor (?) irritations to come Yvonne :(

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  2. Your spilled coffee wasn't a good start to the holiday, sometimes things do seem to go from bad to worse. It's a shame you didn't have prior warning of the increased site fees. To realise you are paying for improvements that don't actually benefit you must have been a real annoyance. At least it was peaceful for you.

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  3. The coffee in the van definitely wasn't a good start Eileen. As for the pitch fees, I wouldn't have minded a just couple of quid increase on last year but the price hike being as much as it was certainly wasn't funny :(

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  4. Hmm, portents are not good.......

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  5. I didn't realise till I hit publish, that's almost a pun! PorTENTS.

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  6. Or you could say POOR TENTS, as that's almost what it ended up as, lol. No, the initial signs definitely weren't good :(

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  7. How disappointing :( I hope the coffee didn't make too much mess!

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  8. The carpet soaked up most of it and once I'd got settled on my pitch I did sponge it over to stop any lingering smell, which it does seem to have done :)

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  9. Oh dear, I tune out the computer for a few days, come back and I have missed a huge amount of bloggy catching up from you!

    Now I know how this story ended up I have a strong feeling that The Universe was trying to tell you something ....

    In the last week I have accidentally spilled two different substances on myself whilst outside. Fortunately nothing exceptionally serious but the first resulted in a chemical burn that is healing slowly and the second left me with a few hours of mild swelling and discomfort. I am certain "things happen in threes" and that this is a warning. When we collect our campervan one of the first things we'll need to do is fill the underslung LPG tank and I know that if you don't handle the connectors correctly you can get a 'frost burn' on your hands. I am taking the first two (thankfully minor) accidents as a warning to be extremely careful.

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  10. The things that happened to me that week seemed to be going in thirty threes rather than just threes! I hope you're okay after your minor accidents and nothing untoward happens when you fill your LPG tank.

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